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Communicate Effectively With Your Kids

Perhaps a big part of being a parent is the willingness to ask for some tips or help about certain challenges and issues that come along. Naturally, every parent wants to have a happy and a healthy child. However, communicating with our kids is not always easy and would take more than just an ordinary conversation. Learning how to do this effectively is essential.

To effectively communicate with our kids, we need to make sure that everything we say gets through to them and we should make sure that they really understand what we are trying to say. On top of that, there should also be an exchange of thoughts, ideas, as well as feelings from one mind to another.

The communication gap between parents and children begins when the child reaches the adolescent stage, or the teen years. During this time, there are many things that a parent should consider in order to keep the communication lines functioning properly.

Before a baby learns to understand speech, parents should first express a sense of security and love to their children. If this feeling is kept consistent as the child grows, the lines of communication between parent and child will improve. However, that does not happen overnight. That is why it is a good idea to encourage your kids to be expressive while they are still young.

Every child has the need to learn, as well as a need to get attention and feel a sense of belonging to the family unit. A child may rush towards his parents, from out of nowhere, to excitedly talk about something in his life. If we cut our kids off with irritation, or with an angry tone, that sense of excitement will be crushed.

Adults may take childish stories to mean nothing, but if we encourage a natural expression from kids, we might be able to avoid having our kids keep things bottled up inside. As paretns, there might come a time when we need our kids to open up.

Effective communication with children entails two things: patience and self control.

These two factors are important because, most of the time, kids are always giddy about the things around them. They tend to blurt out anything that comes to mind. They might even interrupt adults who are in a conversation. When that happens, instead of rejecting them and casting them aside, it would be better to listen to them politely. Then after, you can remind them to be polite back to you. Doing so will give them a good example of the self control that they should have. Parents who do this find that it really does work.

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Here are two great resources for communicating with kids:
Talking to Toddlers is fantastic for dealing with younger kids
The Total Transformation Program is amazing for older kids.

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